πΆ Your pocket-sized gateway to retro synth vibes and endless sonic creativity!
The Stylophone Stylosette is a compact, portable analog synthesizer styled like a retro cassette. Featuring a 3-octave touch-sensitive keyboard, built-in speaker, headphone jack, and effects like vibrato and delay, it offers instant music creation without a stylus. Its expansion port enables STEM-inspired sound experiments using conductive objects, making it perfect for beginners and creative pros on the go.
S**T
Fun Synth instrument
I own lots of Debruq instruments. This is a great addition to my collection, I especially love the Stylosette, patching ability. You can carry it in your pocket and play it anywhere. It's very easy to play. Setting up connectivity circuits is fun, I can even play it through my cat. :) The reverb and delay makes some cool gritty and cat inspired growling tones. It sounds great when connected to my amps and played through effects pedals. I plan on experimenting with the patch ports to see what can happen with equipment like my Moog Mavis and Verkstat. The Stylosette is more than a desktop toy, it is small sound engine with a lot of potential. For the price it is a must have for anyone who likes to experiment with sound.
J**Y
A true delight!
This is the perfect pocket-sized gift for anyone who loves music. The mini keyboard is easy to navigate, and the entire Stylosette offers unlimited fun as you compose little tunes on-the-go or for larger pieces. A bonus? The playful throwback double-cassette packaging is pretty rad too.
J**L
Mostly for fun but a few neat features for synth nerds.
Fun little synth with a few neat tricks up it's sleeve. First to address the controversy, yes, this is remarkably similar to the micro kits cassette synth but, I think improves on the micro kits design. For one, it has an included delay circuit based presumably on the pt2399 delay chip. This means you have a dirty delay that can self oscillate and create it's own noise as well as add some selay depth to the synth sound. The Stylosette Keys has a patch bay to connect it to conductive items to ise them as a keyboard; bananas, plants, anything conductive can be used as a "key" to play a note. The micro kits version does the same...however... The patch bay on the Stylosette Keys also has patch points for LFO in and out, CV in and out, and 2 ground patches. The octave up and vibrato also have patch slots. This means you can manipulate the sounds of the Stylosette Keys with another synth via LFO or a CV sequencer which, vastly expands upon this otherwise basic synth. You can also use the patch bay to create a drone note which allows you to make sounds without having to ise the keyboard at all (the keyboard also has an "off" switch on the PCB). One side note: I saw a YouTube video that says that the little screw between the delay controls does something to the delay, it doesn't...it'a the master intonation and is best left alone (I actually broke the little SMD potentiometer on mine and basically rendered it impossible to intonate...so I bought a second one π). Anyway, fun, definitely limited, but interesting enough that I bought it again when I broke it. Also, was ultimately cheaper than the "original" from micro kits.
J**R
Awesome little synth for the price
This little thing is so much fun and is loaded with great features. The one negative I have is that the minimum volume is unfortunately not capable of going to 0db, so even at the quietest, itβs still got quite a bit of voice to it. Otherwise, it sounds great and has some cool options for connecting it to conductive items around your house, and even to other effects such as LFO. Great value for the price as well. Definitely recommend!
C**A
Sintetizador de bolsillo
Un interesante artilugio con muchas posibilidades. Muy bien presentado.
A**.
Not all notes are tuned correctly
I don't know if I got a defective unit or if that is how it is designed. You can start by tuning the device using an electronic tuner; there are phone apps that do that. After tuning it you can press the first note (let's say C) along with the octave button. That raises that note to the next octave. Then you can press the last node which is also the same note has that. That has a different pitch! You can do that a few times alternately and see what I mean. If they sound exactly the same then it is not a design flaw and I got a bad unit. I'm returning it
S**S
fun but with drawbacks
The cassette tape theme is cute, but not the best choice for storage / portability. The wires, clips, etc. aren't easily placed back into the cassette case, making the "carrying case" sort of irrelevant. Operation takes getting used to but could probably be designed better.I'd think of this as more of a fun, science fair project than a serious music creation tool.On the plus side, it uses 2 AAA batteries (included) - that are easy to find when it comes time to replace the power source.At about $40, it's fairly priced for what it is. But it may be best to go with the original this seems to be a knock-off of.
C**Y
Fun!
This thing is super fun!Don't be surprised to see no back cover. It's by design and is perfectly fine.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 months ago